Only partly true. The team needs to have a viable alternative for a destination. As a Pats fan, there are very few markets where Bob Kraft could go and make more money. That's why he ultimately ponied up his own money to build his own stadium in Foxboro, rather than move into a publicly funded stadium in Connecticut. That all four major sports in Boston play in privately built venues is something I've always been pretty pleased with.Orioles wrote:I am glad St. Louis didn't get stuck with the bill, but the point is the NFL allowed Kroenke to extort the city. Teams do this all the time to their cities without significant intentions on leaving. The NFL is making it easy for owners to do it since they apparently have no problem ignoring all their own by-laws to push an agenda. So that list of cities I posted above? Next time your owner comes to your city saying "Buy us a mega stadium or we're leaving.", the city won't have much of a choice if they want to keep the team.
Kroenke didn't extort St Louis. He left it. He left because staying was not good business.